Let’s get started! Disable unnecessary hardware devices. We have compiled a list of tips to help you get the best experience out of your Mac for your live performance.Īll tips and screenshots were made using macOS Monterey 12.1, the latest version of macOS available at the time of writing: I have no doubt for those of us still with Intel Macs the OCLP guys will come through with a patch this time round and until then pull up a comfy chair and grab a bowl of Popcorn or Potato chips (Crisps for the UK listeners) and enjoy the show.In this article you will learn how to optimize your Apple Macintosh computer for a gig.Īpple computers running macOS have great support for real-time audio and MIDI and typically do not require much optimization – however you may still want to make sure that your performance is neither impacted nor interrupted by other running processes. Apparently not, seems Apple as well as M$ tend to leave archaic remnants of Drivers in their offerings, but not this time. I had put it down to the “Metal Graphic” thing that seemed to occur around 2012. I always wondered why some Mac’s that are out of support needed “Post Install” patching and others did not, including my little 2014 MacBook Pro. Is this Apples way of politely reminding them not to bother in any future endeavours by making it more difficult to patch out of support Macs? Well it does appear that the latest incarnation of MacOS Ventura has dropped from its Beta Version all the legacy Drivers that would have supported “Out of support” Machines, and in a strange move invited MrMacintosh and the leading Developers from the OCLP project to the Cuppertino “WDC Shin-dig” What novel fripperies I’ll be finding or missing by not being able to upgrade to Ventura is certainly not something for me to rue and despair about. Which remains to be seen, now that the Macs with Mx CPUs is what at Apple they care most about. If at Apple they keep up their policy of supporting the last installed version of macOS in an Intel Mac until this version unofficial but expected and customary EOL, some three years after it was first released. In my case and in the case of quite a bunch of other people too. But still with near two and a half years of software support left, being now in Monterey, for a total of close to seven and a half since that date. Then you might find some other things in this article about Ventura that were announced by Tim Cook and Co at the Apple Developers Conference AWWDC22, things that you scrolled through on the way down to this red page and that might also be of some interest.Īlex … once more, for the second time and this is it: I wrote what you are quoting concerning people like me, who are now stuck in Monterey and not allowed to upgrade any further to Ventura and beyond by Apple, denied the right even by Tim Cook himself from his high throne in Cupertino.Īnd at about the same time as this has always happened, some five years since the last Macs of a given model were sold (in my case in mid-July 2018) when they go “Vintage” (mine in July next year) and lose hardware support. You can’t miss it, because it is written inside a big fat red rectangle that practically fills the whole page. That is in the official article from Apple linked with the URL I pasted in my original comment, at the beginning of this thread: click on it when the page with the article opens, scroll almost all the way to the bottom and you’ll find Apple’s Official list of what is in and, by implication, what is out when it comes to installing the just announced and forthcoming version of macOS. But I was referring to people stuck in Monterey, as is anyone with a pre-2017 Mac right now - or soon better be.īy the way, the information on which Macs are eligible to install Ventura?įor the benefit of those who did not know this already:
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